Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 May 1937, p. 2

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r, _* 2Wr2rga'tttSt, .llll . h,,1'Wrd'.'r,',g ”Hum... W h Ch hr. x-hnok his head violently. "No, no! All man velly T'.aid of t,cuc,or-man in this eamp." What could she do? Go alone after them? Was Chine Dick's only friend m hs place? "You are Mister Whalrn's fruma, - RETURN nuts] . Sure, sun and sm- Tm I from others. t 'em hy snowsl "ls there an would come 1 Hum?" she I "ttt , out mm --i' '"" tet "mm - Mm! " to their extremely moderate rates. but to many other out. standing features. appreciated by the experienced traveller . . . The popularity of tho Canadian leili. yoga]: is not only do. A n. tnail 'Gila, all“ In " - ‘MEMSmu- twang-um ___'_°mm. " Nun.“ -..- I In that can. Cath, "0'" m Mum 11-. mrt-l Look outa window .~:- Trn tto-that way, far 'way n'hvrs. Cross lake by east. Find y mowshoc track!" there any man here, Ching, who come and heir. me look foe " she asked pleadingly. n-" cook-house door opened and llt't' Mister Whahvn's friend, Wuuid you do him a bi: _ TI sure Love Huntress " c." he nodded, smiling. tlo ansthing for Mina at n " Mol Tlift IX sh in 'Y E A V: is delicious I. She gulpcd lowly herself. 'n vlvar, think h way they y kill Missa 'ont ot her. out u his nnSWer to Bv H. GLYNN-WARD [I nervous pm» you. loop a. no and I Mk" " any month tor a loam. M’s m: -tt. Wm. a GIG. to Tho last 200 couple“ at. of the hum Cold-Ball Poultry Co-o.-. to be cleared at a "erifieo. Dino-- (inning the Course. " will not In nm’ ted. Mere to an uppurtumty or a "I. mm to at I mat. puma]. authoritative Cour-o in Pout. try Farming tur I men 'Ort-. Cuum “In by hundreds of manual Poultry 13mm " con-med of 30 10mm and tumultuou- by cone-panama. Now In no ammonium: the Coum And otter ttte 30 Jason: only. bound and: In a boot form. tar only $5.00. Than an attout 100 "u Iett and n In clean; them out quickly. ma Gnu: only an. to an-I .-.- --4 -__..A,, ---, SHAW SCI-3001;I LIMITED Dope. AW. "so In, Sb. Tonia =_=e"e-'2'-ee-"'.r..'-'-_-'..re'...N.e-"r-is- "se-ce-_-mr---.--.--."-----"---"-; w“ - -r._--w.---c-r_a_-2-T-2= --_-_ "Chine."' she whiSpered quickly, “will you come with me to look for Mister Whalen.'" "Sun I come, Mince! Better not go till duh!” "Chine, I'll pay you lots of money if you come! I'll have my skin hem "Oh, don't trouble, I'll go.'" She picked up both skis and ski-poles and started across to the cook-house. Al. ready the mm had dispersed from dinner. Braddock, of course, accompanied her. He saw that Chine had the right kind of oil, saw also that she had no one else to talk to Just then, so he left her for a minute. Rink in the office, she held up her ski: for Braddock's inspection. "Have you ever tried skiing, Mr. Braddock? Often Mr. Borne” and l have been out on long trips on Mt. Rainier. I'd hoped he'd come up here with a party. My skis are terribly dry, they have to be kept well-oiled, you know. Do you think that funny old Chinese cook would give me some- thine to oil them with?" "Why sure."' said Braddock, a little puzzled by her seeming friendliness. "I'll take 'em mum and tell him to oil 'em." Ching was her only friend. She might do worse than to take him with her. She must get in touch with him again. Claudia fumed herself to make inane conversation as they walked to the top of the hillock and looked across that vast expanse of snow-cov- ered ice that was the lake. Eagerly she strained her eyes for signs of tracks to the left-Chine had said those two had started east. She thought she could discern them. How could she follow? She couldn’t go ttlone- perhaps tind herself unpro- tected with the fiend who had been sent out to murder Dick.' "Where is the lake?" she asked, smiling up at him. "Do show me the camp!" ( She walked quickly to the store. There might be someone there who could tell her of Dick. The man at the store seemed sur- prised. "Why, no, I've not seen Mr. Whalen since last night. Guess hn'll be back for supper." She saw the man's eyes go over her head. She turned and saw that Braddock harl followed her. As she walked slowly out cf the store. she told herself sternly that she must control her wits as well as her motions. She must disarm sus- picion! Already Braddock had been allowed to see too clearly that she suspected him. She must pretend to be an innocent fool, a silly girl fast out for a lark. want She saw men now making for the cook-house dooc from all parts. Some of them, she noticed, went across to another building first. "What's over there?" she asked. "That's the store," Braddock told her. "We but to keep a supply o' necessities on hand." "rll Co over there," she said. "I "You better come over to my of- fue, Miss.'" he said. "The boy: are just coming in " Braddock stood there. At the same time the siren blew for the dinner hour. A Bargain Foe in :0 over there," she said me cigarettes." "That's clever of him," she thought. “He's sending me in the opposite " rection." Still there we: B, chance of meeting somebody who was a friend "Tell you what, Miss Townsend," laid Buddock. “There's one of our team: lowing right now with an empty sled on it: way to where the (an; is working. How would you like to go along with them to find “Sure! Go like wind. I be ready . . . bring plenty food. . ." So Claudia nuntered back to the ofNe. now by the door, and I'll come as soon as I can get away after dark. You be ready. Can you tmow-shoe'." it III Gid"kr.'"ga"'f, t no. our an nun o. ' an tr, 'rtagrtiBrfwtt and 'd'ltalt fully Illus- -. tre -. mom! in natural cola-m Momma Mmmm Canaan. ' With the rising cost of living be. coming a serious matter in the Irish Free State the farmers of the coun- try are complaining to the Dublin government that they are paying their share of the rise in foodstuffs but are not receiving any. They pro- test that the tariff problem is ag- gravating their troubles. The dairy- men point out that Australian butter is being sold in the Free State at 30 cents a pound while Irish butter commands only 20 and 23 cents across the water. Entrance of New Zealand butter into the country has just started another protest. Far- mers have Joined with the dalrymen and declare they are determined to make their claims heard by the Gov. I ernment. A woman who finishes a course knows how to knock I man out, if need be, Something different in crochet - a chair or davenport set crocheted in strips! One strip makes an arm rest, three a chair back, five a davenport back. Once you've made one, just keep re- peatinm--join them together and you’re ready to work a transforma- tion on your furniture! String works up quickly. and is durable. Pattern 1470 contains directions for making a strip 5% x 1214 inches; illustrations of it and of all stitches used; photograph of section of strip; material requirements; suggestions for a variety of uses. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pat. tern to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., " Adelaide St West, Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. P" "Every woman should know jiu- Jitsu," said the professor. "Men should be glad to see their women studying it. I sometimes think wo- men live a more hazardous life every year." The modern girl or woman is capable of looking out for herself when dealing with gentlemen, said Nakne, but "unfortunately not every man is a gentleman," "Jiu-jitsu - "setdetense taught privately to men or women by na- tive, authority." Five women have enrolled for in. struction under Prof. K. Nskae, whose "shingle" reads: NEW Y0RK.-Women are study- ing jiu-jitsu today---for self-Protec- tion. Jiu-Jitsu Being Studied by Women Brain Operation b Found Cure For Physical Ailment Farmers Want Share , “I”!!! d iauiiG"i'ik Hummus: m. MOW 1llf1Pthlt0N It tity P' CROCHETED CHAIR SET opened It seemed In endless journey back again, terribly cold, and the light was beginning to fail when st last they reached the camp. Soon she could make her escape with Ching-- She got down from the sled and walked slowly toward. the offtee. Braddock came out with a beaming smile. “Just as well you trot back home ...c, - .. _ -» The splendid team of horses cross- ed the lake " a heavy trot, but the two men driving were stupid, and too amused at the idea of their unusual freight to answer questions sensibly. Claudia grew uneasy. Another team was coming towards them, pulling a heavy sled full of lumber. She de. termined to atop and ask the drivers it Whalen was " work where they had come from. "Whalen? No, we ain't seen him at all today." "Then-wig you please take me back to the camp with you. I can sit on top'of the poles, I don't mind a 'out" of Whalen's. . _She agregd to go. bit.'" transform into honey by adding cer- tain enzymes. These convert the complex sugars of the raw nectar into simple sugars, known to chem- ists as dextrose and lcvulose. Bees do not get honey from flow. ers. They get_ nectar, which they The bed-ridden patient was able to walk again three days later, and in the intervening five months has not been in bed for a single day. Her intense pains were said to have been reduced to only a slight tenderness of the back. Almost as a last resort Dr. Free- man and Dr. Watt performed the operation. It consisted of boring two holes in the skull just below the hair line and cutting 12 cores about the size of marbles in the pre-frontal lobes of the brain, just behind the forehead. The cores were not re- moved, but their connection with the surrounding brain tissue was severed. The woman on whom the operation was performed had been nimble to walk for two years and suffered all most continuous intense pains in the back. Her symptoms indicated rhea. matic heart disease and arthritis. the surgeons said. She had averaged one operation every six months for five years with- out growing any better. They told the Medical Society of the District of Columbia that the operation, which previously had been found effective in treating serious mental disorders, also had remedied a physical disorder. WASmNGTlON-. A brain opera tion has returned to health a patient completely bed-ridden fur two years. Dr. James W. Watts and Dr. Walter Freeman of George Washington Uni- versity said last week, PATTERN I470 1 Pint miiCiiii tine dissolved in y, 1 cup "ttar, yolks of 4 1 Can crushed pineapple, drain juice and add Va cup white auger. Let simmer ten minutes; add to pineapple, put in deep dish and pour the following mixtures over it: 1 Pint milk, % box Knox gel» tint: J:--Ah<-J s, .. v“. .. --.. u-uwn " 2 heaping dessertspoons fhy tablespoon butter. Stir this smooth. Then grudualiy Md.... 2 Cups cold water, cook sl until thick, but do not boil. l off stove. Beat white of egg and stir in flour with uni"; Make syrup by boiling sugar and water 10 minutes. Cool, add fruit juice; strain; freeze to a mush; pack and Just before serving. beat thor. oughly. Juice. tsiiiCrii1shi'is' "Hana ')?im'"l'ia, SHIPPING cmmm mm. ORDER cm- Now TORONTO CREAMERY Slice apples in a buttered baking dish. Sprinkle with white sugar and nutmeg. Mix together 1 cup flour, 1-3 cup butter, {a cup brown sugar. Spread mixture over apples and bake until tender. Serve with cream. DELICIOUS DESSERTS Peach Bavaria One package lemon jelly powder with half cup boiling water. When it is cool add 2 cups mashed peach- es sweetened including juice. When partly set fold in %-pint whipped cream, turn into mould and chill. QREAM WANT?!) Highest Prices Paid Weekly CREE"?- "a-....-. --- - Dissolve jelly in warm water. Add pineapple juice, vinegar and salt. When slightly thickened. add pine- apple, carrot and nuts Turn into individual molds. Chill until ttrm. Un. mold on crisp lettuce. Garnish with mayonnaise. Serves 8. The sec-rot. of successful salads is quick-setting jelly. This particular recipe calls for lemon Jelly but there are so many flavours and colors ot jelly on the market that you can " Ways find one to suit the occasion. Golden Glow Saud 1 pkge. quick-setting lemon Jelly, 1 cup warm water, 1 cup canned pineapple Juice, 1 tablespoon vin- egur, Va teaspoon salt, 1 cup canned pineapple, diced and drained. 1 cup grated raw carrot, 1-3 cup pecan meats, finely cut. Besides its attractive appearanue, Golden Glow Salad will become n fav- ourite because it is so easy to make. No one should have to suffer drudg- cry these lovely spring days and if meals are carefully planned to in- elude all the necessities of diet, eas- ily combined and served. there will be plenty of time left over for the housewife to enjoy the weather and enter into the holiday spirit that is abroad now. Yolk of , egg, A Right Royal Salad There was a time when gold had to take a back seat. Many people sold their old gold settings and the demand was for the more silvery metals in jewelry. But the Corona- tion has revived interest in yellow gold because no other precious sub- stance can compare with it in rich. ness and beauty. This would seem a fitting time. then, to serve Golden Glow Salad. it will bring a regal air to your table and ts a salad fit for a king. Grape Frappe 4 Cups water, 1% cups sugar, cups grape Juice, 'd cup lemon Apple Crumble 1"“.."11 A! PAR, " 00w» Co., " NO I. Ton-u White of egg stiff with vanilla. 16 cup brogn lug. . l Woman's di World cup water, , 08831 % tea- flour, '1 slowly till Premier Hepburn is to be asked to change his mind about the mental hospital site for Northern orttavio but Mr. Hepburn, during the Oshawa strike, didn't look like that sort of man.--Port Arthur News-Chronicle. At their meeting here the publish- ers worried about the increased Cost of paper. As an economy measure. we suggest that they reduce the acreage devoted to Mr. Gerard'l ptutu.-.-T'hes New Yorker. _ _ ,-_.\..- -""'"'.r t‘lKlch Norway has less drunkenness than any other country. For Norse is Norse and souse is some and never the twain thail meet.--London Sun- doy Express. European nations rarely are averse to joining peace tqsnferenees, so long on they don't interfere with their preparations for war. --Jaek Wan wick in Toledo Blade. Rose Sehneidernmnt,. native of Russian, Poland and communist sym- pathizer, now heads New York state's labor department. We haven't got I soviet America yet, but ve're gain- ing on it.--Detroit Saturday Night. Mix 1-3 cup brown sugar, 1 cup flour, 2 tablespoons baking powder. pinch salt, % cup raisins. % cup milk. Beat well, put in greased pud- ding or Inking dish. Then take 2 cups boiling water, 1 cup brown sugar, 2 tablespoon butter, la' tea- Ipoon nutmeg. Mix until sugar is melted. Pour over batter. Bake 1 hour. Put all in saucepan. Heat slowly and cook until a little dropped in cold water will form a hall. Remove. from fire and add slowly 1% cups table cream, 1 dessertspoon vanilla and a pinch of salt. Cool and use on rice pudding, cottage pudding or ice ere-m. This makes about 1 qt. and keeps in refrigerator for weeks. Butterscotch Sauce 2% Cups brown sugar. 1 LS cups corn syrup. 4 heaping tablespoons butter. Prepare by softening golatine in cold water. Make a syrup of boil- ing water. sugar and lemon rind. Boil five minutes. Pour over soften,. ed gelatine, stir until dissolved, add lemon and grape juice, and strain. Turn into moistened mould and stir occasionally. Grape Sponge 1 Tablcspoon gehttine, V. c water, 54 cup boiling water, lcspoons sugar, 1 tablespoon juice. 2-3 cup grape Juice, 2 of eggs. spoon salt. Cook in double boiler 15 minutes, when cool add egg whites beaten stiff. Serve with whipped cream. Issue No. 21--'37 Brief Comment Radio Pudding --- cup cold ', 3 tab. n lemon 2 whites mu himseif." “Glass fragments, pilod upon u: other, catch the sun so beautiful" and shine And glow wonderfully tir.. der light- ot night. I ronsidc ‘gluc mountain.' an ideal soluzzv: to the old bottle problem." "it would be a good thing cities Md building glass tt taint. There’s so much broken around these days. and it's w “Knife. Club. sponsors of the prvjovt. tered the timt bottles. Said Mn. Hal Powers. ch:, of the club's civic improvement mitten “only can of land set aside i“.- municipal Inthorities as mountain territory,” were dedicated :19 the spot “PM Which I glitien'ng mystal is to rise. SALT LAKE CiTY..-A mum of tri--. tinat resting pluee fo: bottles-was, darted by club-m, here. Class Mountains Solve the Prob!-, . 1y informality. the minim and I furniture is freer from t ir), than the pieces mmic for mva There is no ncc'tssity to “th '.l the lines of a certain lu-siud. l dum- living is of sum l'(‘('("l . that it ha: no humpuv': Haiti of the Victorian age to {can Whatever makes for comfort 5-1.1 lines of beauty is considcrcl a (Judd there by any beam- Gum for designing anything in our hon- "The church is a human ittstitutitrr., t more perfect or humble than So great important: to summer living and ering of our hmww fo furniture might cm, from the lines of m rattan furniture Hm Because summer t'hin', Yea, summer. A.D. I937 be feared. for man's mm succeeded in making it t' bumble merely; it is row a. season of onjoynwnu so that the ittmost in veitiii'tr. coolness my be attained in th, offhieh they are made. its insistcnre on supprev 5w. L: strong. Life was ruled by l'vvn‘a tion, which is lnutht-I' Lilmt‘ f, i' 'r: dition abused. Summer mean: sauntvzhi J, I ' different now than it dri In t t days. We hare more comfuxl l, t enjoyment and more real pi- f' in . week than our m‘amh’atiwu ha: in a whole semen. We have from] out-rehr- t- .v many of the inhibitions that In " them. We have made outdoor lm.: , "s of our gardens and h rraees. We Kim on our porches. Awning-s keep out the sun so that we may have fresh air in our houses. We go much to the country club, and we go swiftly in motor can; instant! of having to ride behind lethargic owe-ting horses. with clouds of dust attain: over tir. Mnny of In the in .itu-sonditionv,t home- with air pttrffled and 0903M! and healthier til-ll the nie outdo: M Our clothes are assemble. mad,, with the help of Beietttifhe experimvm 8embem of the Wasatch Summer clothes. light. airy affairs suits were thout tr in cooler weather. might be made in "yttt of linen. Wm many pctticonts i winter. though th, usually thinner. Living in genera stiff, still in the shtt, still bound by w): say. Queen 1netori: its insistence on Ott the lawn pus: kin. and if there I of water, I trickle down over the boy brclln. As for the largely given over t flower garden. if a ranged for sitting i There Were porches, of Court, they were never used except a truce or egress. gave only breathless evenings made indnn tolemNe. Then a chair or (m brought out and some of HM f at well back. rather funk-ch someone passing on the street y see them. The human race is certainlv to take it, any: Charles Mom; in the New York Bun. our {on gasped for breath and molten. prayed for I “sea turn," if tlwr on the cont. or if they lived 2 they gasped and swam-m. Ya survived 1nd Med out their ttl' span and were probably as l" u we are. as are those days when 5.; meant seclusion. with shutter, c, Minds drum and doors fart: :. ‘km N the beat out." And u. I an: an. his when these “no "T'. opened for a time to vmni.;.u. carefully. lest the "night m." havoc with health. Summer Is No Longer Feared f, still in the shackles of , l bound by what poop} , Queen Victoria: influcm insistcnre on supprervu' me. Life was ruled by ' which is another name 405- D. Bockcfelicr. " or a certain lit is of such m no hamper: ‘ictoriln age an. Mb", Cu'hes, Home: and Fumiecre Mmer lawn possibly wa if there were no I trickle might oral v to vegct any. v in. tl I‘ll ingot] u it mm- vet-om) IT of m::r iteravy " Sunday St“ I LESS! THE WELKN Silt, whim Test-Eve cth in the “I- ruulrol in I“ " Idea (“one tr., ssgnszs were i Pix-n-rything aha fe/ to him. wi ne tutu: I’ll m my. To him thing and God l ttt tvsettt mm n the divine ht ll) fut! " The [Aw-OI And Eula In ttg n I'l h I9

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